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U.S. Route 270 (Georgia–North Carolina)

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U.S. Route 270 marker
U.S. Route 270
Route information
Auxiliary route of US 70
Length231 mi[3][4] (372 km)
Existed1925[1][2]–1927[3]
Major junctions
West end US 29 / SR 8 / SR 13 in Lawrenceville, GA
Major intersections
East end US 25 / US 70 / NC 10 / NC 20 / NC 29 in Asheville, NC
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesGeorgia, North Carolina
CountiesGA: Gwinnett, Hall, White, Lumpkin, Union
NC: Cherokee, Macon, Swain, Jackson, Haywood, Buncombe
Highway system
SR 269GA SR 270
NC 268NC NC 271

U.S. Route 270 (US 270) was a proposed U.S. Highway that was planned for the northern part of Georgia and the western part of North Carolina. Its western terminus was to be at US 29/Georgia State Route 8 (SR 8) and SR 13 in Lawrenceville; while its eastern terminus was slated to be at US 25/US 70/North Carolina Highway 10/North Carolina Highway 20/North Carolina Highway 29 (US 25/US 70/NC 10/NC 20/NC 29) in Asheville. US 270 was to travel concurrently with SR 13 from Lawrenceville to Gainesville; SR 11 from Gainesville to the North Carolina state line, north-northwest of Blairsville; and NC 10 for its entire length in North Carolina. The highway was proposed in 1925 and canceled in 1927. It was replaced by SR 13, US 19, SR 11, and NC 10.

Route description

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Georgia

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US 270 was planned to begin at an intersection with US 29/SR 8 and SR 13 in Lawrenceville. It proceeded north-northwest to Buford, concurrently with SR 13. There, they were to meet the southern terminus of SR 68. US 270/SR 13 headed northeast to Gainesville. There, they met SR 11 and the northern terminus of US 129. Here, SR 11 joined the concurrency. Almost immediately afterward, SR 13 split off to the northeast, while US 270/SR 11 headed to the north-northeast. In Clermont, they met the southern terminus of SR 43. In Cleveland, the highways curved to the west-northwest, to an intersection with the northern terminus of SR 9. They headed to the north-northwest and curved to the northwest. In Blairsville, they met SR 2. They curved back to the north-northeast and reached the North Carolina state line. Here, SR 11 ended, and US 270 began a concurrency with NC 10.

North Carolina

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US 270 and NC 10 traveled north through Belview and curved to the north-northeast. In Murphy, they intersected NC 28. They curved to the northeast, traveling through Tomotla, Marble, and Andrews. There, they headed to the east-southeast to Valleytown. They headed northeast again, through Rhode, and entered Topton. There, they intersected the southern terminus of NC 108. After traveling through Nantahala, Wesser, and Almond, they met the northern terminus of NC 286. East-northeast of there, the highways traveled through Bryson City. Just northwest of Whittier, US 270 and NC 10 met the southern terminus of NC 107. They curved to the southeast, traveling through Whittier and Wilmot, before entering Dillsboro. There, they met the northern terminus of NC 285. Heading to the east-northeast, they met the northern terminus of NC 106 in Sylva. They traveled through Beta, Addie, Balsam, and Hazelwood, before entering Waynesville. There, they intersected NC 284. Just northeast of the city, they met the southern terminus of NC 209. They headed to the east-southeast, traveling through Clyde and Canton. They curved to the east-northeast, traveling through Turnpike, Luther, and Candler. Just before entering Asheville, they curved back to the east-southeast. In Asheville, US 270 reached its eastern terminus, an intersection with US 25/US 70/NC 10/NC 20/NC 29.

History

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US 270 was proposed in 1925.[1][2] In 1927, it was canceled. It was replaced by US 19 from Lawrenceville to Andrews and from Dillsboro to Asheville, SR 13 from Lawrenceville to Gainesville, SR 11 from Gainesville to the North Carolina state line, and NC 10 from the state line to Asheville.[3][4]

The US 270 corridor now consists of SR 20 from Lawrenceville to the Buford area, SR 124 in Lawrenceville, US 23 from Buford to Gainesville, SR 13 from the Sugar Hill–Buford line to Gainesville, SR 11 Bus. in Gainesville, SR 11 from Gainesville to the North Carolina state line, US 129 from Gainesville to Topton, US 19 from northwest of Cleveland to southwest of Bryson City, SR 75 Alt. in the Cleveland area, SR 180 south-southeast of Blairsville, US 76/SR 2/SR 515 in the Blairsville area, US 64 from Ranger to Murphy, US 74 from Ranger to Asheville, NC 28 from Almond to Lauada, US 441 in the Dillsboro area, US 23 from Dillsboro to Asheville, US 276 from Dellwood to Lake Junaluska, and NC 215 in Canton. The current path is approximately 213 miles (343 km)[5]

Major intersections

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StateCountyLocationmi[3][4]kmDestinationsNotes
GeorgiaGwinnettLawrenceville0.00.0
US 29 / SR 8 / SR 13 south
Western end of SR 13 concurrency; western terminus; SR 13 is now part of SR 20/SR 124.
Buford13.521.7
SR 68 north
Southern terminus of SR 68; now part of SR 20
HallGainesville32.151.7

US 129 south / SR 11 south
Western end of SR 11 concurrency; northern terminus of US 129; US 129/SR 11 is now part of SR 11 Bus.

SR 13 north
Eastern end of SR 13 concurrency; now also part of US 23
Clermont
SR 43 north
Southern terminus of SR 43; now part of SR 52
White
No major junctions
Lumpkin68.7110.6
SR 9 south
Northern terminus of SR 9; now also part of US 19
UnionBlairsville89.3143.7 SR 2
GeorgiaNorth Carolina state line100.4
0
161.6
0.0
Eastern end of SR 11 concurrency; western end of NC 10 concurrency; northern terminus of SR 11; western terminus of NC 10
North CarolinaCherokeeMurphy813
NC 28 east
Western terminus of NC 28
Topton3658
NC 108 north
Southern terminus of NC 108; now part of US 129
SwainLauada5589
NC 286 south
Northern terminus of NC 286; now part of NC 28
Jackson66106
NC 107 north
Southern terminus of NC 107
Dillsboro77124
NC 285 south
Northern terminus of NC 285; now part of US 23/US 441
Sylva78126
NC 106 south
Northern terminus of NC 106; now part of NC 107
HaywoodWaynesville96154 NC 284Now part of US 276
105169
NC 209 north
Southern terminus of NC 209
BuncombeAsheville131211
US 25 / US 70 / NC 10 east / NC 20 / NC 29
Eastern terminus; eastern end of NC 10 concurrency
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Joint Board on Interstate Highways (1925). "Appendix VI: Descriptions of the Interstate Routes Selected, with Numbers Assigned". Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways, October 30, 1925, Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture, November 18, 1925. Washington, DC: United States Department of Agriculture. p. 59. OCLC 733875457, 55123355, 71026428. Retrieved December 3, 2018 – via Wikisource.
  2. ^ a b Rand McNally & Co. (1926). "North Carolina South Carolina" (Map). Rand McNally Junior Road Map. Chicago: Rand McNally & Co. – via Broer Map Library.
  3. ^ a b c d Clason Map Company (1927). Mileage Map of the Best Roads of North Carolina (Map). Clason Map Company. §§ K1, K2, J2, J3, J4. Retrieved November 17, 2018 – via Alabama Maps.
  4. ^ a b c State Highway Department of Georgia (October 1926). System of State Roads (PDF) (Map). Scale not given. Atlanta: State Highway Department of Georgia. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  5. ^ "Overview map of US 270's current path" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved November 18, 2018.
[edit]
  • "U.S. 270". The NC Roads.com Annex. February 17, 2013. Retrieved November 15, 2018.